The issue that’s specific to Europe is loss of cheap energy from Russia. Industry is obviously affected by lack of cheap energy because it makes input costs for production go up. And of course global economic problems contribute to the problems that Europe has, however it’s misleading to conflate the two problems.
I’m also not sure what part of the headline you’re claiming to be misleading. It’s literally taken verbatim from the report.
75% of the change happened before the Russian invasion. And even after March 2022 the Russian gas supply was not stopped significantly for some more months thus bringing it up to like 85%-90% probably. And of the remaining actual impact it dropped off again by nearly 5% in recent weeks.
So very clearly you are conflating the two things, with the stop of Russian gas exports contributing only a relatively minor amount to the increase in industrial prices between October 2021 and 2022.
And it is always possible to take a quote out of context and put that as a misleading headline to push one’s agenda as you are clearly doing here.
I’m not conflating the two things. I’m saying that there was already a severe problem before the economic war started, and it’s pretty clear to me that now the problem is worse because there’s a new factor.
There is absolutely nothing misleading about stating the plain fact that the industrial inflation in the EU was 30.8% in October. Seems to me that you’re the one trying to push the agenda that lack of access to cheap energy is not a serious problem for Europe.
The issue that’s specific to Europe is loss of cheap energy from Russia. Industry is obviously affected by lack of cheap energy because it makes input costs for production go up. And of course global economic problems contribute to the problems that Europe has, however it’s misleading to conflate the two problems.
I’m also not sure what part of the headline you’re claiming to be misleading. It’s literally taken verbatim from the report.
75% of the change happened before the Russian invasion. And even after March 2022 the Russian gas supply was not stopped significantly for some more months thus bringing it up to like 85%-90% probably. And of the remaining actual impact it dropped off again by nearly 5% in recent weeks.
So very clearly you are conflating the two things, with the stop of Russian gas exports contributing only a relatively minor amount to the increase in industrial prices between October 2021 and 2022.
And it is always possible to take a quote out of context and put that as a misleading headline to push one’s agenda as you are clearly doing here.
I’m not conflating the two things. I’m saying that there was already a severe problem before the economic war started, and it’s pretty clear to me that now the problem is worse because there’s a new factor.
There is absolutely nothing misleading about stating the plain fact that the industrial inflation in the EU was 30.8% in October. Seems to me that you’re the one trying to push the agenda that lack of access to cheap energy is not a serious problem for Europe.